TokyoBoglehead wrote: ↑Sun Dec 25, 2022 12:30 pm
I am not sure you can rollover the J-Nisa, it just "stays" tax-free until your child is 18. It is then dumped into their taxable, which was opened at the same time (they come in a package).
At least until now, J-NISA balances could be rolled over - e.g. my J-NISA from 2018 has been rolled over for 2023's allocation. It was always 800K per year but only up to 5 years, similar to a regular NISA in that respect. I seem to recall reading that similar rollover procedure will be for the remaining years too, but indeed it seems a pointless requirement now, given the changes.
The other change for J-NISA I gather is, with the initial investment accounts ending in 2023, from 2024 the rule about the child being 18 years of age is to be eliminated, so one could access the funds anytime one likes. However, with there being no obvious new tax-free home for these old J-NISAs, I am currently thinking I'll indeed leave them in J-NISA and not plan on selling out.
zeroshiki wrote: ↑Tue Dec 27, 2022 7:15 am
With the new no rollover approach and the 18M limit, I find it difficult to see an argument for regular NISA being better than T-NISA for 2023. With T-NISA, you get 400k tax free for 20 years completely separate from the 2024 New-New-NISA. In fact, if you had timed it right, you could have 4 T-NISA accounts going in addition to the 2024 NISA which is basically an extra 1.6M invested tax free (note that this is from a pure min-max perspective and assuming people would instantly max out their 18M NISA allotment in 5 years which I realize is a rough ask even for most of the people on here).
I didn't give this much thought, it was just a default, lazy choice. I started with regular NISA in 2014, and never looked at it much when Tsumitate NISA came out - even now I suspect I probably don't know what I might be missing, but ah well.
Still, if one has a maxed out regular NISA going into 2024, there will be 3,600,000 million new tax-free to use, along with 4 years worth of remaining regular NISA balances (which might be worth upwards of 4,800,000 hopefully), for a total 8,400,000 tax free bracket. Then in 2025 it's up to 7.2 + 3.6 (10.8m), 2026 to 10.8 + 2.4 (13.2m), 2027 to 14.4 + 1.2 (15.6m), and then in 2028 just the 18.0m. (After 5 years, these assets under investment will hopefully be worth more than the tax-free allocation anyway.)
Either way, T-NISA or regular NISA, the result is much more tax-free investing. and one'd probably need to review the situation in 2040 to determine whether they really did better choosing one or the other in light of their personal investment portfolio, I suspect.